Nope. I just know how the vision of a fly works. If humans see at roughly 60fps, a fly can see at 240 fps. That's why they're so quick to move when you try to smack them. They see you coming at slow-motion but their vision might be blurry as a result.

Nope. I just know how the vision of a fly works. If humans see at roughly 60fps, a fly can see at 240 fps. That's why they're so quick to move when you try to smack them. They see you coming at slow-motion but their vision might be blurry as a result.

Nope. I just know how the vision of a fly works. If humans see at roughly 60fps, a fly can see at 240 fps. That's why they're so quick to move when you try to smack them. They see you coming at slow-motion but their vision might be blurry as a result.

But if you close in really slow, they won't notice.

Flies can be annoying, we had an issue with them in a hallway where I work... looks kinda tacky with the bug sticks though
Does vision really work in frames?

Nope. I just know how the vision of a fly works. If humans see at roughly 60fps, a fly can see at 240 fps. That's why they're so quick to move when you try to smack them. They see you coming at slow-motion but their vision might be blurry as a result.

But if you close in really slow, they won't notice.

Flies can be annoying, we had an issue with them in a hallway where I work... looks kinda tacky with the bug sticks though
Does vision really work in frames?

It's worth noting that in real-world vision (and pre-recorded video) you have motion blur, which you can't get as accurately in games, so higher frame rates aren't as important as they are in video games.

Posted by AtomicAstroWell I guess that makes sense. I mean I always knew that your eye retains images for a slight amount of time to process them, hence why animation, film or video games are possible.

But did you know we originally get the visuals upside down and the brain corrects it?

Posted by AtomicAstroWell I guess that makes sense. I mean I always knew that your eye retains images for a slight amount of time to process them, hence why animation, film or video games are possible.

But did you know we originally get the visuals upside down and the brain corrects it?

I think that's how the eye (and the various parts within it) works.

I did know that actually, learned that in science class in 4th grade I think.

Posted by AtomicAstroWell I guess that makes sense. I mean I always knew that your eye retains images for a slight amount of time to process them, hence why animation, film or video games are possible.

But did you know we originally get the visuals upside down and the brain corrects it?

I think that's how the eye (and the various parts within it) works.

Not only that, if you wear special glasses that flip your field of vision, very quickly your mind will get used to it and flip it back so everything will look normal again.